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Property / last update
20 January 2023
Timestamp+2023-01-20T00:00:00Z
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Property / cites work
 
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0.9.1
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1.0.2
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1.0.4
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1.0.6
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15 September 2023
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Provides functions to generate and analyze spatially-explicit individual-based multistate movements in rivers, heterogeneous and homogeneous spaces. This is done by incorporating landscape bias on local behaviour, based on resistance rasters. Although originally conceived and designed to simulate trajectories of species constrained to linear habitats/dendritic ecological networks (e.g. river networks), the simulation algorithm is built to be highly flexible and can be applied to any (aquatic, semi-aquatic or terrestrial) organism, independently on the landscape in which it moves. Thus, the user will be able to use the package to simulate movements either in homogeneous landscapes, heterogeneous landscapes (e.g. semi-aquatic animal moving mainly along rivers but also using the matrix), or even in highly contrasted landscapes (e.g. fish in a river network). The algorithm and its input parameters are the same for all cases, so that results are comparable. Simulated trajectories can then be used as mechanistic null models (Potts & Lewis 2014, <doi:10.1098/rspb.2014.0231>) to test a variety of 'Movement Ecology' hypotheses (Nathan et al. 2008, <doi:10.1073/pnas.0800375105>), including landscape effects (e.g. resources, infrastructures) on animal movement and species site fidelity, or for predictive purposes (e.g. road mortality risk, dispersal/connectivity). The package should be relevant to explore a broad spectrum of ecological phenomena, such as those at the interface of animal behaviour, management, landscape and movement ecology, disease and invasive species spread, and population dynamics.
Property / description: Provides functions to generate and analyze spatially-explicit individual-based multistate movements in rivers, heterogeneous and homogeneous spaces. This is done by incorporating landscape bias on local behaviour, based on resistance rasters. Although originally conceived and designed to simulate trajectories of species constrained to linear habitats/dendritic ecological networks (e.g. river networks), the simulation algorithm is built to be highly flexible and can be applied to any (aquatic, semi-aquatic or terrestrial) organism, independently on the landscape in which it moves. Thus, the user will be able to use the package to simulate movements either in homogeneous landscapes, heterogeneous landscapes (e.g. semi-aquatic animal moving mainly along rivers but also using the matrix), or even in highly contrasted landscapes (e.g. fish in a river network). The algorithm and its input parameters are the same for all cases, so that results are comparable. Simulated trajectories can then be used as mechanistic null models (Potts & Lewis 2014, <doi:10.1098/rspb.2014.0231>) to test a variety of 'Movement Ecology' hypotheses (Nathan et al. 2008, <doi:10.1073/pnas.0800375105>), including landscape effects (e.g. resources, infrastructures) on animal movement and species site fidelity, or for predictive purposes (e.g. road mortality risk, dispersal/connectivity). The package should be relevant to explore a broad spectrum of ecological phenomena, such as those at the interface of animal behaviour, management, landscape and movement ecology, disease and invasive species spread, and population dynamics. / rank
 
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Property / author: Lorenzo Quaglietta / rank
 
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Property / author: Miguel Porto / rank
 
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Property / copyright license: GNU General Public License, version 2.0 / rank
 
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Property / copyright license: GNU General Public License, version 3.0 / rank
 
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edition/version: expanded from: GPL (≥ 2) (English)
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Property / cites work
 
Property / cites work: How do animal territories form and change? Lessons from 20 years of mechanistic modelling / rank
 
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Property / cites work
 
Property / cites work: A movement ecology paradigm for unifying organismal movement research / rank
 
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Property / source code repository: https://github.com/cran/SiMRiv / rank
 
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Property / Software Heritage ID: swh:1:snp:cf9f66bd27d887a177e5b875ff02d0028eac71bd / rank
 
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point in time: 4 October 2023
Timestamp+2023-10-04T00:00:00Z
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links / mardi / namelinks / mardi / name
 

Latest revision as of 17:12, 21 March 2024

Simulating Multistate Movements in River/Heterogeneous Landscapes
Language Label Description Also known as
English
SiMRiv
Simulating Multistate Movements in River/Heterogeneous Landscapes

    Statements

    0 references
    1.0.5
    20 January 2023
    0 references
    0.9.1
    15 July 2016
    0 references
    0.9
    12 July 2016
    0 references
    1.0.0
    27 July 2017
    0 references
    1.0.1
    17 August 2017
    0 references
    1.0.2
    7 November 2017
    0 references
    1.0.3
    31 January 2018
    0 references
    1.0.4
    19 December 2019
    0 references
    1.0.6
    15 September 2023
    0 references
    0 references
    15 September 2023
    0 references
    Provides functions to generate and analyze spatially-explicit individual-based multistate movements in rivers, heterogeneous and homogeneous spaces. This is done by incorporating landscape bias on local behaviour, based on resistance rasters. Although originally conceived and designed to simulate trajectories of species constrained to linear habitats/dendritic ecological networks (e.g. river networks), the simulation algorithm is built to be highly flexible and can be applied to any (aquatic, semi-aquatic or terrestrial) organism, independently on the landscape in which it moves. Thus, the user will be able to use the package to simulate movements either in homogeneous landscapes, heterogeneous landscapes (e.g. semi-aquatic animal moving mainly along rivers but also using the matrix), or even in highly contrasted landscapes (e.g. fish in a river network). The algorithm and its input parameters are the same for all cases, so that results are comparable. Simulated trajectories can then be used as mechanistic null models (Potts & Lewis 2014, <doi:10.1098/rspb.2014.0231>) to test a variety of 'Movement Ecology' hypotheses (Nathan et al. 2008, <doi:10.1073/pnas.0800375105>), including landscape effects (e.g. resources, infrastructures) on animal movement and species site fidelity, or for predictive purposes (e.g. road mortality risk, dispersal/connectivity). The package should be relevant to explore a broad spectrum of ecological phenomena, such as those at the interface of animal behaviour, management, landscape and movement ecology, disease and invasive species spread, and population dynamics.
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    Identifiers